You will receive two automated email acknowledgements after you register. One is a payment confirmation, the other is a registration confirmation listing the lectures you’re attending. Save these emails for your records.
A few days before each lecture, you will receive an email with a calendar invite and a Zoom link to access the talk. Each talk will have a separate link. You will only receive links to lectures you registered for.
Virtual lectures have capacity limits and may sell out. Early registration is strongly recommended.
Registration for individual lectures closes the Sunday before the event.
The Arboretum’s long-running Winter Enrichment series offers lectures for naturalists in the greater Madison area as well as for volunteers, friends, and community members.
Feb 10, 2021
Northwood School student Lars K. (last name not given) does field work on the weekend of Jan. 30-31 as part of the Adirondack Wildlife Inventory and Monitoring Project.
(Photo provided)
Northwood School student Lars K. (last name not given) does field work on the weekend of Jan. 30-31 as part of the Adirondack Wildlife Inventory and Monitoring Project.
(Photo provided)
Northwood Schoolâs Advanced STEM Research class
(Photo provided) Northwood School student Lars K. (last name not given) does field work on the weekend of Jan. 30-31 as part of the Adirondack Wildlife Inventory and Monitoring Project.
(Photo provided)
Cleary
Barton & Loguidice announce the following promotions:
Lesen Haracz has been promoted to project engineer. She is a member of the firm’s water/wastewater practice area. She has a B.S. in environmental engineering from Syracuse University.
Olivia Mallon has been promoted to staff assistant landscape architect. She is a member of the firm’s sustainable planning & design practice area. She has a B.L.A. from SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry.
Nicole Cleary has been promoted to senior project landscape architect. She is a member of the firm’s sustainable planning & design practice area. She has a B.L.A. from SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry.
In Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s proposed 2022 Executive Budget, the state Department of Environmental Conservation would get $1.8 billion in new appropriations — an 11% increase — with most Adirondack programs’
Kelly Brunette (Photo provided) SARANAC LAKE Kelly Brunette, the Democratic nominee for the March 16 Saranac Lake village board special election, has worked for the village before and believes it is her time to serve as an elected official in the community she has made her home. She believes the current village board is “strong” but that she could add a family-first mindset. “I represent a different constituency in the village that isn’t shown on the village board right now,” Brunette said. Brunette attended Paul Smith’s College in the 1990s, moving up here from Oswego. She left to attend the SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry in Syracuse and “bounced around” before moving into the Saranac Lake community in 2004. Since then she has started a family.